Society & Culture - Posted by Tim Green-U. Texas on Tuesday, December 1, 2009 16:57 - 4 Comments    
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Facebook profiles reveal true self

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“These findings suggest that online social networks are not so much about providing positive spin for the profile owners,” says psychologist Sam Gosling, “but are instead just another medium for engaging in genuine social interactions, much like the telephone.” The researchers used questionnaires to assess the profile owners’ actual personality characteristics as well as their ideal-personality traits (how they wished to be).

TEXAS-AUSTIN (US)—Online social networks such as Facebook are being used to express and communicate real personality, instead of an idealized virtual identity, according to new research from psychologist Sam Gosling.

“I was surprised by the findings because the widely held assumption is that people are using their profiles to promote an enhanced impression of themselves,” says Gosling of the more than 700 million people worldwide who have online profiles. “In fact, our findings suggest that online social networking profiles convey rather accurate images of the profile owners, either because people aren’t trying to look good or because they are trying and failing to pull it off.

“These findings suggest that online social networks are not so much about providing positive spin for the profile owners,” he adds, “but are instead just another medium for engaging in genuine social interactions, much like the telephone.”

Gosling, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and a team of researchers collected 236 profiles of college-aged people from the United States (Facebook) and Germany (StudiVZ, SchuelerVZ). The researchers used questionnaires to assess the profile owners’ actual personality characteristics as well as their ideal-personality traits (how they wished to be). The personality traits included: extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism, and openness.

In the study, observers rated the profiles of people they did not know. These ratings were then compared to the profile owners’ actual personality and their ideal-personality. Personality impressions based on online social network profiles were accurate and were not affected by profile owners’ self-idealization.

Accuracy was strongest for extraversion—paralleling results of face-to-face encounters—and lowest for neuroticism. Those findings were consistent with previous research showing that neuroticism is difficult to detect without being in person.

“I think that being able to express personality accurately contributes to the popularity of online social networks in two ways,” says Gosling. “First, it allows profile owners to let others know who they are and, in doing so, satisfies a basic need to be known by others. Second, it means that profile viewers feel they can trust the information they glean from online social network profiles, building their confidence in the system as a whole.”

Gosling recently coauthored a study on how first impressions do matter when it comes to communicating personality through appearance. For his latest personality research, he focuses his attention to personality in relation to online social networks.

Findings will be published in an upcoming issue of Psychological Science. Researchers from Washington University in St. Louis and from Westfälische Wilhelms-University Münster and Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, both in Germany, contributed to the study.

University of Texas at Austin news: www.utexas.edu/news/

4 Comments

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Andy
Dec 2, 2009 19:40

This is why Google tried to purchase Facebook…imagine the Google Analytics that they would be able to generate. Can anyone say “monetize” my personal info? My profile now states my date of birth is 1910…I don’t expect too many solicitors will try to sell me anything as at this age I am not even buying green bananas.

People are real on Facebook « Feral Librarian
Dec 3, 2009 0:04

[...] that people will use online social networking to project idealized versions of themselves, research shows that college students’ Facebook profiles project their actual personality rather than their [...]

Katheline Jean-Pierre
Dec 5, 2009 3:18

And that is why Facebook succeeded where Second Life failed. Thank you for sharing this study.

MacSmiley
Dec 5, 2009 8:35

@Andy

I’m sure you are right about Google’s motives, and I am glad the deal fell through. But with Zuckerberg idolizing Bill Gates, don’t you think Facebook is already monetizing your personal info? And that includes all your updates, not just the false date you’ve given them for your D/O/B. Post an update that you’re XX number of years old or that it’s your XXth birthday and you’ve belied the 1910 birth date. Oh, and don’t forget what your friends post about you also gets factored into the monetizing process as well.

There’s no such thing as a free lunch.

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